Theory of Mind: Deaf and Hearing Children's Comprehension of Picture Stories and Judgments of Social Situations
Author(s) -
Sara L. Rhys-Jones
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
the journal of deaf studies and deaf education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.862
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1465-7325
pISSN - 1081-4159
DOI - 10.1093/deafed/5.3.248
Subject(s) - psychology , theory of mind , comprehension , developmental psychology , task (project management) , test (biology) , hearing loss , audiology , cognition , linguistics , medicine , paleontology , philosophy , management , neuroscience , economics , biology
We compared 20 prelingually profoundly deaf adolescents (age: 11-16 years) and 20 matched, hearing adolescents on a picture-sequencing task and on a social judgment test. In addition, we also tested 14 younger deaf children (age: 6-10 years) and compared their data with those from 20 hearing peers as well as those from the older deaf participants on the picture-sequencing task. The results from this study did not provide evidence for the hypothesis that deaf adolescents possess significantly poorer knowledge about social reasoning than age-matched hearing peers, but it did present further additional support for Peterson and Siegal's (1995) conversational hypothesis: a proposal that a deprivation in conversations about mental states leads to an impairment in the development of an awareness of mental states in the younger deaf children.
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